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   1996  Anatoly Karpov - Gata Kamsky









Anatoly Yevgenyevich Karpov    Gata Kamsky

  Site: Russia  Elista
  Event Date: VI - 1996

FLAG FED FIDE  NAME 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10
01 RUS 2770  GM Anatoly Karpov 1 0 ½ 1 ½ 1 1 ½ 1 0
02 USA 2735  GM Gata Kamsky 0 1 ½ 0 ½ 0 0 ½ 0 1

FLAG FED FIDE  NAME 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 TOTAL 
01 RUS 2770  GM Anatoly Karpov ½ ½ ½ 1 ½ 0 ½ ½ 10.5/18 
02 USA 2735  GM Gata Kamsky ½ ½ ½ 0 ½ 1 ½ ½ 7.5/18 



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FIDE World Chess Championship 1996 - External Links

   Mark Weeks' Chess Pages - World Chess Championship - 1996 Karpov - Kamsky FIDE Title Match
   Mark Weeks' Chess Pages - World Chess Championship - 1994-96 FIDE Candidates Matches
   Mark Weeks' Chess Pages - World Chess Championship - 1993 Biel FIDE Interzonal Tournament
   Mark Weeks' Chess Pages - World Chess Championship - Zonals 1993-1996 (C16)
   Wikipedia - World Chess Championship

Denmark   Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - VM i skak 1996 (FIDE)
United Kingdom   Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - FIDE World Chess Championship 1996
France   Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - Championnat du monde de la FIDE 1996
Italy   Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - Campionato del mondo di scacchi FIDE 1996
Portugal   Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - Campeonato Mundial de Xadrez de 1996 (FIDE)
Spain   Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - Campeonato Mundial de Ajedrez 1996 (FIDE)
Spain   Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - Campionat del món d'escacs de 1996 (FIDE)

FIDE World Chess Championship 1996

The FIDE World Chess Championship 1996 was a chess tournament held by FIDE to determine the World Chess Champion.

Background

At the time the World Chess Champion title was split.

In 1993, Nigel Short had qualified via FIDE's usual format to meet champion Garry Kasparov in a championship match. However, Kasparov and Short broke with FIDE and played under the auspices of a new organization which they had organized, the Professional Chess Association (PCA). Kasparov won this match to remain champion.

With its two top players withdrawn, FIDE awarded the two slots in its 1993 championship match to Anatoly Karpov and Jan Timman, both of whom had been defeated in earlier qualification rounds by Short. Karpov won the match to became the FIDE World Champion.

The FIDE World Chess Championship 1996 was FIDE's first since the 1993 split. Meanwhile, the PCA held its Classical World Chess Championship 1995, in which Kasparov defeated Vishy Anand to retain his title.

Many of the same players competed in both organization's qualifying events. However, Kasparov and Short did not compete in the FIDE event.

Interzonal

FIDE held an Interzonal tournament at Biel in 1993, run as a 73 player, 13 round swiss system tournament. The top 10 players in the Interzonal qualified for the Candidates Tournament, where they were joined by 1993 FIDE World Champion Anatoly Karpov, 1993 FIDE runner-up Jan Timman, and 1993 Candidates semi-finalist Artur Yusupov. (The other 1993 semi-finalist was the excluded Nigel Short).

Championship

The round of 16 matches were held in Wijk aan Zee and the rounds of 8 and 4 matches were in Sanghi Nagar. If tied after the specified number of games (which happened only in the Kamsky-Anand match), rapid chess games were played as tie breaks.

The format was a departure from all previous world championships, in that the reigning champion (Karpov) was not seeded into the final match. Instead, he joined the competition at the semi-final stage.

Karpov defeated Kamsky in the final held in Elista, to retain his title of FIDE World Chess Champion.

Match results

 

     FIDE World Chess Championship 1996. (2 October 2011 at 06:54). In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 8 November, at 18.00, from
   http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FIDE_World_Chess_Championship_1996







   
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